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Assessment of Feasibility and Acceptability of Personalized Breast Cancer Screening

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Breast Cancer
Registration Number
NCT03791008
Lead Sponsor
Institut de Recerca Biomèdica de Lleida
Brief Summary

The overall objective is to assess the acceptability and feasibility of offering personalized breast cancer (BC) screening.

The specific objectives are: 1) To design an information system; 2) To evaluate the barriers and facilitators of the coordination of health care services and the screening program; 3) To develop a proof of concept of personalized screening; and 4) To evaluate cost-effectiveness.

Methodology:

1. Prototype information system with basal and longitudinal variables relevant to a personalized screening system;

2. Qualitative study with focus groups and survey. The attitude and acceptability on a sample of 210 health professionals will be assessed;

3. Prospective observational study, for proof of concept. Participants will be professionals working in Primary Care, Population Breast Screening Program, or Hospital Breast Unit. It will include 385 women, aged 40-50 from the city of Lleida. Various indicators of acceptability and feasibility will be assessed in women and health professionals;

4. Probabilistic analytical models will be used to evaluate cost-effectiveness.

The present protocol addresses the specific objective number 3, the proof of concept of personalised screening.

Expected results: The investigators expect to provide valuable and necessary information for the design of personalized screening.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
387
Inclusion Criteria
  • Not having had a mammogram in the last 12 months or with a mammogram in this period available to evaluate breast density.
  • Sign the informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Previous diagnosis of breast cancer.
  • Breast study in process.
  • Fulfill clinical criteria defined by the Medical Oncology Spanish Society (SEOM to refer to the genetic counseling unit in cancer.
  • Do not understand or speak Catalan or Spanish.
  • Cognitive disability for mental or mental illness.
  • Physical disability that prevents a mammogram.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Satisfaction with personalised screeningAt 1 year of the study start

Satisfaction Likert scale with one item that ranges from 1 to 5: not at all satisfied (1), extremely satisfied (5). Following the Sekhon et al. review (2017)

Attitude towards personalised breast cancer screening (by participant women)2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Attitude scale with three items, one about the frequency of screening exams (ranges from 1 to 5). The other two items ask if participants are satisfied of being invited more/less frequently, in case that they have a higher/lower risk of breast cancer than the average women. They also range from 1 to 5. Total scores can range from 3 to 15. Higher scores indicate more positive attitudes. A positive attitude is defined as a total score greater or equal to 12. Adapted from Hersch et al. (2015)

Intention to participate in personalised breast cancer screening2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Categorical variable with five categories: definitely will, likely to, unsure, not likely to, definitely will not. The absolute and relative frequencies of the five categories will be obtained. In addition, the variable will be dichotomized as intending to participate (definitely or likely) or not. Adapted from Hersch et al. (2015)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Screening attitudes scale2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

General attitudes scale towards screening mammography. It will be measured using five items adapted from Hersch et al. (2015). Each item ranges from 1 to 5. Total scores can range from 5 to 25. A positive attitude is defined as a total score greater or equal to 20. Higher scores indicate more positive attitudes. Adapted from Hersch et al. (2015)

Attitude towards the measure of breast cancer risk2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

One categorical variable with four categories. It asks if the measure of breast cancer risk will do more harm than good, more good than harm, it depends, do not know. The absolute and relative frequencies of the four categories will be obtained. Following the Sekhon et al. review (2017)

Emotional impact of the measure of breast cancer risk2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Three categorical variables with five categories, ranging from strongly disagree (1) to strongly agree (5). First variable: The information about the individual risk of breast cancer provides calmness. Second variable: Receiving information about risks produces anxiety. Third variable: The information about the individual risk of breast cancer makes me worry. The scores of the three items will not be added as a scale, they will be reported separately. Adapted from Hersch et al. (2015)

Preference with regard to the current screening, biennial between 50 and 69 years2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Categorical variable with three categories. It asks what type of screening the participants would choose (personalized risk-based or "one-size-fits-all")

Self-efficacy2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Four items ranging from strongly disagree (1) to strongly agree (5). Total scores can range from 4 to 20. Higher scores indicate higher self-efficacy. Following the Sekhon et al. review (2017)

Experience assessment2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

It will be measured using five items. Each item ranges from 1 to 5. Total scores can range from 5 to 25. A positive assessment is defined as a total score greater or equal to 20. Higher scores indicate more positive experience assessment. Following the Sekhon et al. review (2017)

Time spent on risk communicationAt the time of communicating risk, 2-4 weeks after the baseline visit

Continuous variable, number of minutes. Recorded by the participant doctors

Proportion of women who accept to participate in the studyThrough study completion, an average of 1.75 years

Number of women that accept to participate divided by number of women contacted

Knowledge of the benefits and harms of breast cancer screening2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Eleven conceptual knowledge questions (Yes/No) and four numerical knowledge questions with categories on the effect of screening. A total of 22 marks could be obtained, 11 coming from the questions on conceptual knowledge and 11 coming from the questions on numerical knowledge that measured absolute and relative values of the screening outcomes. The threshold to define adequate knowledge is to score at least 50% of the available marks, including at least one numerical mark, on all the three screening outcome subscales that refer to mortality reduction, overdiagnosis, and false positives. Adapted from Hersch et al. (2015)

Decisional conflict2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

O'Connor Decisional Conflict Scale, 10-item low literacy version, on a scale from 0 (no decisional conflict) to 100 (extreme decisional conflict). Scores less than 25 are associated with implementing decisions; score exceeding 37.5 are associated with decision delay or feeling unsure about implementation.

Perceived significance of the benefits and the adverse effects of screening2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Women will be asked how important it is for them to consider the chances of (1) avoiding breast cancer death, (2) being diagnosed and treated for a cancer that is not harmful, and (3) having a false positive. The four response options range from very important (1) to not at all important (4). The scores of the three items will not be added as a scale, they will be reported separately. According to Hersch et al. (2015)

Understanding of the individual risk and the screening recommendations2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Two categorical variables with five categories each, ranging from strongly disagree (1) to strongly agree (5). First variable: I understood the information I received about my risk of breast cancer in relation to women of my age. Second variable: I have understood the recommendations given to me about the screening of breast cancer in the coming years, based on my risk of breast cancer. The scores of the two items will not be added as a scale, they will be reported separately. Following the Sekhon et al. review (2017)

Confidence in the decision2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Three Likert scale statements rated from 1 (not at all confident) to 5 (very confident). A total score is obtained summing the scores of the three items and dividing by three.

Adapted from the O'Connor Decision Self-Efficacy Scale

Anxiety about screening participation2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Six-item short form of the Spielberger State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) on a scale from 20 to 80, with higher scores indicating greater levels of anxiety. To calculate the total STAI score, reverse scoring of the positive items (calm, relaxed, content), sum all six scores and multiply total score by 20/6.

Confidence in personalised screening2-4 weeks after being informed of the individual breast cancer risk

Confidence Likert scale with one item ranging from very low confidence (1) to very high confidence (5) . Following the Sekhon et al. review (2017)

Proportion of participating women who complete the different phases of the studyThrough study completion, an average of 1.75 years

Number of women that complete the different phases divided by number of participating women

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Institut de Recerca Biomèdica de Lleida

🇪🇸

Lleida, Spain

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